Word: sum
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...Jacob H. Schiff, of New York, has offered to the Harvard Menorah Society the sum of $100 annually until further notice to be awarded as a prize for the best essay by an undergraduate in Harvard College on a subject connected with the work and achievements of the Jewish nation. The prize, which will be known as the "Harvard Menorah Society Prize," will be awarded for the first time this year...
Several Law School men, among whom are graduates of the University and of Yale and Princeton, have made arrangements for the formation of a social club, which shall have as its object the promotion of social unity in the Law School. A considerable sum has been subscribed already in the form of bonds and 47 Brattle street has been taken as a club-house, a steward engaged, and necessary arrangements made. The club will afford a place where men interested in legal topics may meet and discuss matters of common interest. The most prominent men engaged in pushing this idea...
...tonight the sixth and last of the William Belden Noble lectures for the year. The lecture, which will be given at 8 o'clock in Danders Theatre, will be open to the public. The subject for the evening will by "The Representative Leader of Men," and the address will sum up what has been said in the previous lectures on the general topic of "Leadership...
...will face a more complicated situation than his recent predecessors. Not only must-provision be made for next year's coaching. More far-reaching than this is the demand from undergraduates and graduates that some continuity in football coaching should be assured. We realize that football is not the sum total of our existence. But it is of enough importance to demand that we should make every effort to play successful football,--and that, according to present standards, is something to which we have not attained...
...necessary as sun and moon. Professor Palmer, speaking of another teacher beloved by Harvard men, says finally: "Under Professor Shaler the student gained a kindling vision of pretty much all of the natural world; under Professor Norton, of the human." And perhaps Mr. Bryce's words best sum up what we all feel and what these writers in different ways have fittingly expressed: "His clear and luminous intellect, shining with a steady glow, has been a beacon light to many who seek their way amid the tossing waters that surround us. Loving beauty in literature and in art, and seeing...